
Various - TV, Anime & Manga New Age Soundtracks 1984-1993 Vinyl LP
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Album Facts
Various - TV, Anime & Manga New Age Soundtracks 1984-1993 Vinyl LP
70s & 80s futurism captured from the anime and manga of the time
Price $34.00
Format 1xLP
Label Time Capsule
UPC 650245521923
Color Black
Year April 25 2025
Condition
Album Facts
70s & 80s futurism captured from the anime and manga of the time
Price $34.00
Format 1xLP
Label Time Capsule
UPC 650245521923
Color Black
Year April 25 2025
Condition
The percussive new age soundtracks of '80s and early '90s Japanese TV, anime and manga built alternative worlds and pushed boundaries in the process. When Japanese composer Yas-Kaz left Tokyo for Bali in the mid 1970s he had little idea of how influential his trip would become. In studying the storied art of gamelan, the jazz and avant-garde percussionist opened a door to a world of sound and rhythm left behind by the West. The music he and his contemporaries made would become known as new age. It also happened to soundtrack the golden era of anime.
Awash with money and with the prerogative to entertain the burgeoning middle classes, anime in the 1980s experienced a creative and commercial boom. Not constricted by generic expectations, production houses such as the now renowned Studio Ghibli were able to experiment liberally with both form and content. And with it came the space for composers to be similarly adventurous.
TV, Anime & Manga New Age Soundtracks 1984-1993 charts this moment across eight tracks spanning classics of the genre and previously unknown rarities. The collection brings together music that found kinship in electronic and acoustic instrumentation, often combining spiritual or environmental themes with percussive, varied and highly refined syncopations of non-Western musical traditions.
Among them is âKanedaâ by Geinoh Yamashirogumi, the shape-shifting group of self-styled musicians, anthropologists and computer scientists that masterminded the soundtrack to game-changing dystopian anime Akira - and with whom the sound, tuning and breakneck speed of Balinese gamelan has become indelibly entwined.
Reflecting the desires of the era to reach beyond Japanâs borders, many of the soundtracks featured were commissioned for narratives set in distant lands or alternative worlds. Thereâs violinist and composer Norihiro Tsuruâs âFarsighted Personâ, written for The Heroic Legend of ArslÄn, set in ancient Persia; Yas-Kazâs own âHei (Theme of Shikioni)â, for period sci-fi manga & anime series Peacock King - Spirit Warrior; and two tracks - Tassili NâAjjer and Fiesta Del Fuego - from Yoichiro Yoshikawaâs soundtrack to NHKâs proto-Planet Earth series The Miracle Planet.
Such was the variety and quality of the music produced, if there is a guiding principle to the tracks collected here it is a sense of escapism and adventure that came with the confluence of modern electronic instruments and a fascination with percussive traditions.
Elsewhere, pioneering childrenâs TV composer Chumei Watanabeâs âFushigi Songâ (performed by a vocal group Korogi â72) offers a trippy and infectious groove with sonic similarities to Don Cherryâs âBrown Riceâ; little-known jazz-funk library group Columbia Orchestra showcase the best of Tokyoâs session musicians on âHearts Beats - Theme for Andrew Glasgowâ; before lawyer-turned-composer Kan Ogasawara closes out the compilation with a dramatic flourish on âGishin Ankiâ.
Following on from Time Capsuleâs acclaimed deep-dive into the world of manga & anime synth-pop in 2022, this vinyl only collection is set to broaden and diversify an understanding of how soundtracks shaped the sound of new age music in Japan for a generation.